10 Awesome and Successful Women in the Field of Computer Science You Should Know

 

Justin_Maddox_Rakia_Finley1Rakia Finley

Finley is the founder and CEO of Surge Assembly. The technology firm’s goal is to promote growth in terms of racial and gender diversity. Her business started in 2003-04. At that time, she was helping nonprofits in the Washington, D.C., area expand into the thriving tech world. She and her brother help these organizations with their websites and email marketing.

 

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Kimberly Bryant

In 2011, Bryant founded San Francisco-based nonprofit Black Girls Code. Her organization has been responsible for inspiring 1,500 girls to work in technology fields such as robotics, video game design, mobile phone application development and computer programming. In 2014, she received the White House Champions of Change for Tech Inclusion award for work to diversify the tech industry.

10 Exceptional Black Women Who Are Changing the Face of Tech

windowWindow Snyder

She is the security and privacy product manager of Apple. Snyder’s parents worked as programmers and taught her the program BASIC at 5 years old. Snyder is an expert on cryptography and has worked at Mozilla, where the Web browser Firefox was developed, and Microsoft.

ory-okollohOry Okolloh

The Kenyan native was originally a Harvard-educated lawyer before turning to tech. Her company Ushahidi is a revolutionary crowd-sourcing platform that allows citizen journalists and eyewitnesses all over the world to report incidences of violence through the Web, mobile E-mail, SMS and Twitter. She currently serves as Google’s policy manager for Africa.

As Tech Industry Battles a Serious Diversity Problem, DigitalUndivided Brings Much Needed Urban Population to Tech Space

In the midst of a serious diversity problem plaguing the tech industry, DigitalUndivided founder Kathryn Finney is bringing perhaps the rarest demographic for the tech space into the field: Black women.

In an industry that not only fails to deliver on racial diversity but gender diversity as well, Black women are extremely rare in the technology space. But DigitalUndivided is fighting to put an end to that.

“We want to see more urban entrepreneurs, especially Black women, in tech,” Finney told Atlanta Blackstar. “Through our FOCUS Fellows program, we provide Black and Latino women founders and co-founders with the networks and knowledge to build successful companies.”

That’s exactly what DigitalUndivided is all about—making sure urban entrepreneurs have the skills and access to resources they need to achieve great things in the tech space.

Members of the FOCUS Fellows program have gone on to obtain “leadership positions at companies as diverse as Uber, Facebook and Chicago Infrastructure Trust,” she said.

For quite some time, DigitalUndivided has been helping the tech space become more diverse while embarking on a mission to increase the amount of urban tech entrepreneurs. It’s a mission about which Finney herself has good reason to be passionate.

As an African-American woman, she has experienced first-hand what it’s like to be the rare breed in such an important field of work.

“All the companies I’ve started have been because of personal need,” Finney said before explaining her extensive history in the tech and digital media space. “…In 2006, I was looking to capitalize on my platform and join one of New York’s first tech incubators. There I learned first-hand the challenges that people of color, especially women, face if they want to break into the tech space.”

While Finney’s career has led her to a ton of firsts—first style blogger to get a book deal, one of the first style bloggers to be accredited for Fashion Week, first time appearing on a national morning show—diving into the tech space introduced her to a different kind of first.

“It was the first time in my life that I was in a community where I was expected to be ‘less than’ solely because of my race and gender,” she said. “I had white male colleagues tell me that I couldn’t relate to other Black women because I had an accountant.”

That experience is exactly what turned into the nationally recognized brand that Finney is the head of today.

“That experience stuck with me,” she said. “…So I formed DigitalUndivided in 2012 and we held our first project FOCUS100, in October 2012.”

DigitalUndivided is the type of business that has the potential to revolutionize the tech industry and change the face of an industry that has been dominated by white males for years.

Of course, the work is far from being done. Finney said people of color will have to be more assertive when it comes to breaking down the barriers to an industry that has shunned them for years.

“As people of color we often want people to ‘invite’ us into spaces and spend a lifetime waiting for that invitation,” she said as she shared her advice for other Black people looking to become tech entrepreneurs. “Success comes to those who show up, with or WITHOUT, an invite.”

She also encouraged aspiring tech entrepreneurs to embrace failure, cultivate relationships and forget all about the naysayers who don’t believe in their talent.

 

Blerdology Founder Continues Mission to Empower Young Women Through STEM

Michelle in Training

Before she launched Blerdology, tech savvy entrepreneur Kat Calvin was busy putting young girls all across the Washington, D.C., area in training to become successful, educated leaders in life.

Blerdology hosted its inaugural event in 2012 and marked the first nonprofit hackathon series specifically geared toward African-American women in the tech community.

As it turns out, however, the hackathon was only the latest venture from founder Calvin who has dedicated much of her time to empowering young women through science, technology, engineering and math (STEM).

Roughly four years ago, Calvin launched Michelle in Training, a nonprofit organization that teaches young women the type of skills they need to become successful leaders and possibly the next tech entrepreneurs of their generation.

“Our mission is to teach college-bound high school girls the professional and life skills they need to succeed,” Calvin said to Atlanta Blackstar.

While the nonprofit doesn’t only focus on technology-based skills, it does take a particular focus on making sure young women are introduced to STEM careers.

“We have a special focus on STEM because these days that is a profession and a life skill,” Calvin said.

Last year, Calvin explained exactly why she considered STEM skills like coding to be so essential for the young women who are a part of her organization.

“If you can code, you can find a job, especially like now – every single thing is done [online],” Calvin said on her website. “Even if you run a brick and mortar [store] selling antique buttons, you have to have a website! If you code and you can develop a website, you will have a job. Coders and graphic designers at the end of the earth will be the only people who still have jobs.”

In addition to making the D.C. girls a little more tech savvy, the nonprofit also focuses on “study skills, health and wellness, etiquette and appropriate dress, leaders” and much more.

According to Calvin, these are the skills that can help mold the young soon-to-be first generation college students into strong, confident professionals.

The core values of the organization are the skills that Calvin insists many students aren’t learning in urban high schools, according to the official Michelle in Training website.

“Social intelligence, philanthropy, cultural awareness, educational curiosity, civic responsibility and personal branding,” are all listed as core values at Michelle in Training and are often referred to as “MiT skills.”

Other exciting activities that MiT girls have been a part of include outdoor camping trips, archery classes and a once-in-a-lifetime chance to meet President Barack Obama.